State Of Washington, V. Bria Jessie Danner

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedDecember 28, 2022
Docket56021-6
StatusUnpublished

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Bluebook
State Of Washington, V. Bria Jessie Danner, (Wash. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

December 28, 2022

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 56021-6-II

Respondent,

v. UNPUBLISHED OPINION

BRIA JESSIE DANNER,

Appellant.

CRUSER, A.C.J. ⎯ Bria Jessie Danner, a woman with a significant mental health history,

killed a woman with whom she had been having a dispute over a hotel bill. A jury rejected

Danner’s insanity defense and convicted her of first degree premeditated murder. Danner appeals,

arguing that (1) the trial court abused its discretion when it required her to submit to a third sanity

evaluation, (2) the State engaged in prejudicial prosecutorial misconduct when it misstated the law

on the insanity defense in its closing argument, (3) her trial counsel provided ineffective assistance

of counsel when he failed to object to this improper argument or request a curative instruction, and

(4) no rational jury would have rejected her insanity defense.

We hold that (1) any potential error in requiring Danner to participate in a third evaluation

was harmless error because the opinion testimony of the expert who conducted this evaluation was

based on the same facts disclosed in the first two examinations and relied on by the other experts,

(2) the prosecutor’s argument was not improper, (3) defense counsel did not provide ineffective

assistance by failing to object to this argument, and (4) the evidence was sufficient to allow the

jury to have found that Danner failed to prove her insanity defense. Accordingly, we affirm. No. 56021-6-II

FACTS

I. BACKGROUND

A. THE MURDER

As of 2019, Danner had lived in the Aberdeen area for ten years and was known by several

police officers. Danner was homeless and had an extensive history of mental health issues dating

from at least 2009.

Danner did not like staying in homeless encampments because she was fearful that

individuals there would rob or steal from her, so she occasionally used her Supplemental Security

Income (SSI) benefits to stay at local hotels. But she would not stay at some of the local hotels

because she believed that some of them had “attempted to poison her.” Report of Proceedings (RP)

at 56.

In November 2018, Danner stayed at the GuestHouse Inn in Aberdeen. Danner believed

the Inn was charging her a special rate that would enable her to stay there most of the month. But

after a few nights, she learned that this was not the case.

Danner was upset by this revelation, and even contacted the police over this matter.

Although others, including a police officer, had explained to her that she had not been overcharged,

Danner was unable to accept this fact.

At some point over the next month, Danner confronted the owner of the hotel, Sung Sil

Kim. According to Danner, Kim had kicked her, and Danner attempted to call the police for

“permission to kick her back.” RP at 56.

At about 10:00 AM, on January 30, 2019, Sergeant Darrin King, who had interacted with

Danner between 20 to 30 times over the previous years, responded to a welfare check near the fire

2 No. 56021-6-II

station. When King arrived, Danner was in the street and was yelling for no reason, which was not

unusual behavior for her. But she had already talked to the aid personnel and was getting ready to

move somewhere else.

King later testified Danner had “some level of mental [illness] issues,” and he was familiar

with her doing “things that just are abstract and abhorrent and not criminal, just bizarre behavior.”

RP at 371. He stated that during his contact with Danner on the morning of January 30, she was

acting as she normally did.

At about 3:25 that afternoon, Danner approached the Inn, hid some of the several bags she

was carrying in the bushes next to the building, and entered the lobby area. Danner approached the

coffee bar and fixed herself a cup of coffee while concealing a knife in her other hand. After filling

a coffee cup, Danner put the coffee down on the desk. When Kim looked her way, Danner attacked

Kim and repeatedly stabbed her with the knife. Following the initial stabbing, Danner started to

leave. But she returned, appeared to try to pick up the phone, and then continued to stab Kim.

Danner then left the building.

Kim suffered 25 sharp force injuries, and both of her lungs and her thoracic aorta were

pierced. Kim had died by the time emergency assistance arrived. The attack was videotaped by the

Inn’s security system. The police obtained the surveillance tapes that showed the stabbing

incident.1

When Danner left the Inn, her hands and clothing had blood on them. Just outside of the

Inn, she attempted to wipe the blood off of her hands with some napkins, which she tossed on the

1 This video was shown to the jury.

3 No. 56021-6-II

ground. After she collected some of the items she had placed in the bushes, she walked into the

street while “waving her arms frantically as if . . . she was trying to stop traffic.” RP at 232.

Jennifer Ottosen, who was working at a store across the street from the Inn observed

Danner leave the Inn, pull a bag or backpack out of the nearby bushes, and then cross the nearby

road. When Danner stopped in front of the store, Ottosen observed that there was “a lot of blood

on [Danner’s] hands [and] clothes.” RP at 233. Ottosen later showed the store security video to the

police and provided them with a copy.2

After passing Ottosen’s store, Danner walked to the nearby homeless encampment located

next to the Chehalis River. Her friend Azucena Fernandez-Island noticed Danner was bleeding

and wrapped Danner’s hand. Fernandez-Island thought Danner had been in a fight because she had

heard people threatening Danner before and knew “a couple of people who wanted to get in a fight

with her.” RP at 271. Fernandez-Island asked Danner if she was okay, and Danner said that she

was. But Danner did not explain how she got the blood on her hands, and Fernandez-Island did

not ask her to explain and she did not closely examine Danner’s hands.

When someone in the encampment shouted out a warning that the police were coming,

Danner and Fernandez-Island walked away from the encampment and headed separate directions.

Fernandez-Island later testified that Danner was normally “a little off,” and that Danner was not

acting any differently when she saw her that day. RP at 275.

Danner proceeded to a nearby Safeway store where she purchased a cup of coffee. The

clerk who sold her the coffee noticed that there was blood on Danner’s hand, shirt, and money.

2 This video was shown to the jury.

4 No. 56021-6-II

The clerk later testified that Danner “seemed a little twitchy and not entirely present in that she

was in her head.” RP at 281.

B. POLICE CONTACTS AND INVESTIGATION

Danner sat down outside the store to drink her coffee. Someone reported that there was a

woman in or near the store covered in blood, and Captain Bradley Frafjord of the Aberdeen Fire

Department and Lieutenant Warden Chastain of the Aberdeen Police Department contacted

Danner.

Chastain was the first to arrive. He knew Danner and was aware that she had had

interactions with other officers in the area for about 10 years.

Chastain noticed that Danner’s left hand was covered in blood, that she had dots of blood

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